| Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Born | 16 February 2007 | |||||||||||||||||
| Sport | ||||||||||||||||||
| Sport | Athletics | |||||||||||||||||
Event | High jump | |||||||||||||||||
| Achievements and titles | ||||||||||||||||||
| Personal best(s) | High jump: 2.19m (Birmingham, 2026) Long jump: 7.57m (Sheffield, 2026) | |||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Regan Corrin (born 16 February 2007) is a British high jumper and long jumper from the Isle of Man.[1]
Career
[edit]From Port Soderick, and a member of Manx Harriers, Corrin won the gold medal in the high jump at the 2023 Island Games in Guernsey, when he was only 16 years-old, clearing a height of 1.95 metres.[2][3][4] Corrin began to train in Loughborough in 2023, making an improvement in his personal best for the high jump.[3]
Corrin set personal best of 2.05 metres for the high jump at the Baker Tilly Isle of Man Championships as a 17 year-old in 2024.[4] Competing in the long jump, he became the first Manx jumper to jump over 7 metres in June 2024.[5] That year, he placed fourth in the high jump at the 2024 European Athletics U18 Championships in Slovakia, cleared a height of 2.05 m to equal his personal best.[4] In September 2024, he broke the Manx under-20 high jump record at the Southport Waterloo Open, clearing 2.13 metres.[6]
The following February, he jumped a new Manx record 7.28 metres at the England Athletics Indoor Track & Field Championships in Sheffield to win the Men's U20 Long Jump event.[5] He retained the high jump title at the 2025 Island Games in Orkney.[3][7][8] He also won the silver medal at the Games in the long jump, jumping 7.29 metres, just shy of the person best he set in June 2025, when he jumped 7.31 metres in the long jump at the University of Birmingham Track & Field Festival.[9][10]
In London on 31 January 2026, Corrin set a new Isle of Man indoor record as he finished second in the under-20 men's long jump at the South of England Indoor Championships with a jump of 7.31m. The following day, he competed in the high jump at the championships, winning with a height of 2.08m.[11] Corrin cleared a personal best height of 2.15 metres to win the England Athletics U20 Indoor Championships in Sheffield in February 2026 to set a new Isle of Man under-20 record.[12] The following day, he increased his Isle of Man long jump record to 7.57 metres.[13] On 15 February, he was runner-up on count-back to Joel Clarke-Khan in the high jump at the 2026 British Indoor Athletics Championships in Birmingham, clearing a new personal best 2.19 metres, on the day before his nineteenth birthday.[14]
References
[edit]- ^ "Regan Corrin". World Athletics. Retrieved 15 Feb 2026.
- ^ Tracey, Ashlea (9 July 2023). "Gold in shooting and high jump at Guernsey Games". BBC News. Retrieved 7 Feb 2026.
- ^ a b c "Regan Corrin – Q&A". Iomathletics. 8 October 2025. Retrieved 7 February 2026.
- ^ a b c "Regan Corrin finishes impressive fourth at European Under-18 Athletics Championships". iomtoday. 24 July 2024. Retrieved 7 February 2025.
- ^ a b "Athletics: Regan Corrin smashes own Manx long jump record". Manx Radio. 12 Feb 2026. Retrieved 7 Feb 2026.
- ^ "Regan Corrin wins 2024 David Teece Award for Excellence". Manxradio. 2 October 2024. Retrieved 7 Feb 2026.
- ^ Tracey, Ashlea (14 July 2025). "Gold in shooting and high jump at Guernsey Games". BBC News. Retrieved 7 Feb 2026.
- ^ "Island Games 2025: Regan Corrin successfully defends high jump title". Isle of Man Today. 13 Jul 2025. Retrieved 7 Feb 2026.
- ^ "University of Birmingham Track & Field Festival". World Athletics. 14 June 2025. Retrieved 7 Feb 2026.
- ^ "Island Games: Corrin picks up silver in long jump". Manxradio. 17 July 2025.
- ^ "Athletics: New personal best for Regan Corrin". Manxradio. 4 February 2026. Retrieved 7 February 2026.
- ^ "U15/U17/U20 Indoor Championships - Day 1, a world class start to the weekend". England Athletics. 7 February 2026. Retrieved 7 Feb 2026.
- ^ "U15/U17/U20 Indoor Championships - Day 2: Super Sunday". England Athletics. 8 February 2026. Retrieved 9 Feb 2026.
- ^ Henderson, Jason (15 Feb 2026). "SCOTT LINCOLN CLAIMS NATIONAL TITLE NO.21 IN BIRMINGHAM". Athletics Weekly. Retrieved 15 Feb 2026.